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'Brokeback Mountain': Why all the fuss?
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EVER SINCE LARRY H. MILLER YANKED 'BROKEBACK MOUNTAIN' FROM HIS
SUBURBAN MULTIPLEX, THE DECISION - AND THE FILM ITSELF - GENERATED
CONTROVERSY OVER THE ROMANCE BETWEEN TWO COWBOYS. IS IT JUST ABOUT
MEN HAVING SEX? AND WHY IS THAT WORSE THAN A SADISTIC HO
By
Brandon Griggs
The Salt Lake Tribune
Regardless of whether you agree with Larry H. Miller's decision
to pull the gay Western romance "Brokeback Mountain" from
his Jordan Commons multiplex, it's clear that he created a controversy
around the movie where almost none existed.
It may seem hard to believe now, but for most of the month that
"Brokeback Mountain" has been in theaters, it has been
largely ignored by right-wing groups. Religious conservatives abhor
the film's content but say they don't want to give free publicity
to a movie that already has generated an avalanche of it. No organized
boycotts or protests have greeted the film, and the Sandy theater
remains the only one in North America to yank it from its schedule.
In this way, Miller's snub of "Brokeback Mountain" raises
questions that until now were not being asked in Utah about the
movie. Such as: With scores of R-rated films, including some with
gay sexual themes, released in theaters every year, why is this
movie raising a ruckus? How is a gay love story more morally offensive
than other movies - such as "Hostel," a horror film that
shows sadists fulfilling their depraved fantasies by paying to torture
other people; or the stoner comedy "Grandma's Boy," which
features drug use in almost every scene - now playing at Miller's
theaters?
And what exactly about "Brokeback Mountain" do some people
find so threatening?
The short answer, of course, is: men having sex. The longer answer
is more complicated.
"There are a lot of other movies out there that are just as
objectionable [as 'Brokeback Mountain']," said conservative
crusader Gayle Ruzicka, president of the Utah Eagle Forum. "Would
I like theater owners to pull those, too? Yes."
As of Friday, Miller wasn't saying why the film was yanked. It certainly
wasn't because of its poor financial prospects. At the Broadway
movie theater in downtown Salt Lake City, "Brokeback Mountain"
set box-office records when it opened Dec. 30. The movie also became
the top per-screen grosser at the Century 16 cinemas in South Salt
Lake when it opened there Jan. 6, ahead of "The Chronicles
of Narnia" and "King Kong." After five weeks in limited
release, "Brokeback Mountain" has earned more than $22
million - solid numbers for a movie likely to be shunned by much
of straight-male America.
In case you haven't heard, "Brokeback Mountain" is a
drama about a secret affair between two Wyoming ranch hands, played
by Heath Ledger and Jake Gyllenhaal, who fall in love when they're
hired to herd sheep together on a lonely mountainside in the summer
of 1963. Although both men marry women, they meet regularly over
the next 20 years for secluded trysts. Ledger and Gyllenhaal kiss
several times onscreen, and the movie contains a much-discussed
scene in which the two men have brief, frenzied and almost fully
clothed sexual intercourse in a tent.
That scene understandably may make even open-minded moviegoers squirm.
But it's arguably less disturbing than the bloody violence in such
acclaimed mainstream films as "Silence of the Lambs,"
"Natural Born Killers" or "Kill Bill" - let
alone "Hostel," which is rated R for what the Motion Picture
Association of America calls "brutal scenes of torture and
violence, strong sexual content, language and drug use."
Several Oscar-nominated movies, including "Deliverance,"
"The Prince of Tides" and "Pulp Fiction," also
have graphic depictions of male rape that drew less attention than
the consensual sex scene in "Brokeback Mountain."
"So many movies show violence and it's OK," said Clark
Monk, an openly gay Utah rodeo cowboy. "And yet society can't
watch a movie about two people who love each other? To me, that's
far better than blood, guts and gore."
Film critics have long wondered whether the MPAA, Hollywood's moral
police, has two different standards when it comes to rating sex
and violence onscreen. Maybe it's because we live with violence
almost every day on the local news, in video games and in action
movies. Gay sex, on the other hand, is foreign to most of us and
therefore still packs the power to offend. In a column last year,
Salt Lake Tribune film critic Sean P. Means questioned whether the
MPAA gives gay-themed movies harsher ratings than movies with equivalent
heterosexual content.
Onscreen sex between women doesn't seem to provoke audiences like
sex between men. The gay sex in "Brokeback Mountain" is
less explicit than a nude love scene between Naomi Watts and Laura
Elena Harring in the Oscar-nominated "Mulholland Drive,"
which played multiplexes without fuss in 2001. It's also less raunchy
than the hetero sex audiences have witnessed for decades in such
mainstream hits as "Basic Instinct" and "The 40-Year-Old
Virgin."
Gay advocates say that same-sex relationships are more acceptable
to mainstream movie audiences when they are portrayed as campy,
as in 1996's "The Birdcage," about a gay couple who pretend
to be straight to impress their son's in-laws; or sexless, as on
the TV sitcom "Will and Grace." The characters in "Brokeback
Mountain" are not effeminate and therefore harder to dismiss
as deviants, gays say. They could be your friend or neighbor. Maybe
they could be you.
"That's the idea that's frightening [to mainstream audiences],"
said Jerry Rapier, an openly gay Salt Lake City theaterproducer.
"These characters have none of the stereotypical signs that
people associate with a gay person. They're not hairdressers, or
guys with a lisp."
If the lovers in "Brokeback Mountain" were hairdressers
in San Francisco's Castro neighborhood or in West Hollywood, few
people would make a big deal about the movie. But they're rural
cowboys, perhaps the most masculine of American icons. Ranchers
and other modern-day rural Westerners have called "Brokeback
Mountain" a "slap in the face" to their way of life.
Religion, of course, also plays a big role. The Church of Jesus
Christ of Latter-day Saints, like Catholics and Baptists, believes
that engaging in homosexuality is a sin. In the LDS Church, such
behavior often leads to excommunication.
"Let's not sugarcoat it - for a great number of people, this
is getting into immoral territory," said Doug Wright, a talk-show
host who reviews movies for KSL Radio, which is owned by the LDS
Church. Wright gave the film three stars out of four but cautioned
his listeners about its content. "It's a hard movie to recommend,"
he said. "There were some very uncomfortable moments in the
movie for me."
Ruzicka said she is troubled most by the main characters' deceptions
in hiding the affair from their wives.
"This movie is about adultery and men who are cheating and
lying to their children and their families," said the right-wing
activist, who has not seen the film. "It's interesting that
there's such a to-do over [the film's cancellation]. What if one
of the alternative theaters said they won't show 'The Chronicles
of Narnia' because it has a [pro-Christian] religious theme?"
Some conservatives, without seeing "Brokeback Mountain,"
have dismissed it as homosexual propaganda. But despite its provocative
subject, the film has no overt political agenda. And many who've
seen it agree that in some respects, it's not even a gay movie.
As a sweeping, tragic love story, "Brokeback Mountain"
has more in common with "Titanic," the most popular movie
ever, than an art film steeped in the urban gay lifestyle.
Ultimately, observers say, the Utah hubbub over "Brokeback
Mountain" has less to do with its content than its high profile.
The vast majority of sexually provocative indie films screen only
at art-house theaters in urban neighborhoods before audiences unlikely
to be offended by them. But "Brokeback Mountain" has dominated
critics' awards and is considered a favorite for the Best Picture
Oscar, landing it in eight Wasatch Front movie theaters and on radar
screens of people who otherwise wouldn't be aware of it. The media,
which gravitate to controversy, also has stirred debate over the
movie.
"If awareness had not been raised about the film, it might
have come and gone," said Deseret Morning News movie reviewer
Jeff Vice, president of the Utah Film Critics Association. "But
it's everywhere. You can't turn around without hearing an interview
about the film or hearing about it winning an award somewhere."
This critical praise may have been what led Miller to book "Brokeback
Mountain" in the first place. In an interview with KCPW-FM's
Jonathan Brown on Jan. 5, shortly before the movie was pulled from
Jordan Commons, Miller cited the film's seven Golden Globe nominations
as a sign of its potentially broad appeal.
"Even though there are premises in ["Brokeback Mountain"]
that I wouldn't personally subscribe to, if you look at the credentials
of the movie . . . that would suggest it's more attuned . . . for
[the] mainstream than some of the other [movies] we've projected,"
Miller said. "I have to let the market speak. It'll be interesting
to see how it's received."
But as Brown pressed him on how the film would go over with his
conservative suburban audience base, Miller seemed to reconsider.
"It is possible that the content of this [film] . . . is offensive
enough to a large enough segment of the population that this is
one that slipped by our screening process," added Miller, who
said he would not see the film. "Maybe I've been a little naive
and not paid proper attention to it and let it slip through the
cracks. If I have, then I made a mistake."
Maybe he did. But in the long term, history will judge "Brokeback
Mountain" not on its attendant hype or controversies but on
the movie itself. And that's the way it should be.
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